Transformational Steam Infusion Processing for Resilient and Sustainable Food Manufacturing Businesses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Steam Infusion Process
- Liquid food material is recirculated through the Steam Infusion Vaction™ pump, where steam is accelerated to a high velocity before entering into the liquid food stream via an annular nozzle (Figure 2). This process is conducted repeatedly with controllable temperature changes (∆t) between 1 °C and 30 °C, which are dependent on steam pressure. Through multiple cycles, an overall temperature gradient, typically up to 95 °C within the atmospheric kettle, is achieved. The product can be held at this temperature using an insulated covering so that the food materials are typically pasteurised and are cooked through to the required texture/consistency. Steam Infusion is designed to cook the liquid food extremely quickly and efficiently using steam that is under pressure and is in direct contact with food materials instead of through a heated jacketed kettle wall. It also provides options for using traditional kettle cooking to provide a ‘jacket and Steam Infusion’ production process. The trials for Steam Infusion were tested in this reported research using the steam infusion technologies developed by OAL (reported on-line through personal communication to W Martindale by OAL, Steam Infusion Test Centre, 2020). Profiling within the steam chamber can accelerate the velocity of the steam to 1000 m s−1 (3280 feet s−1), which is above the speed of sound. The steam passes into the mixing chamber through an annular nozzle disrupting the liquid food flow to form small droplets, referred to as the vapour phase. The momentum transfers from the steam to the food material and creates a partial vacuum of −0.7 barg (−10.1 psig) within the unit.
- As the steam condenses into the liquid food droplets, the pressure rises. This is referred to as the condensation shockwave, and it generates a pumping effect. The small droplets within the low-pressure vapour phase offer a significantly increased product surface area for the steam to condense into, typically resulting in a near instantaneous temperature gradient of 10–15 °C (50–59 °F).
- The very short residence times and partial vacuum within the unit prevent exposure to excessive temperatures. There are no hot contact surface areas/hot spots, and therefore, the Steam Infusion process prevents Maillard reactions and the resulting burn-on.
- An unrestricted Vaction™ Pump pumps at a rate of 50,000 kg/h (55 US t/h) in water at 20 °C (68 °F), and the turbulent mixing conditions in the low-pressure vapour area enhance the transfer of flavours. The Vaction™ Pump has an uninhibited bore of 47 mm (1.85 in), enabling particulates to freely pass through the unit with no damage.
2.2. Data Collection during Processing
- (1)
- The processing energy and GHG balance trial processed batches of vegetable soup that had the following ingredients (specific recipe amounts are protected due to commercial sensitivity): butter, cream, milk, cabbage, mushroom, onion, potato, spinach, and tomato. As guidance, recipe typical amounts for a vegetable soup will be 35–45% w/v vegetables, 5% w/v butter, 5% w/v cream, 10% w/v milk, and processed to 100% volume with water. The soup was cooked using the Steam Infusion Vaction™ Pump and using a steam jacket vessel method separately to compare performance.
- (2)
- The processing time trial provided further temperature assessments and demonstrations of the Steam Infusion Vaction™ Pump data collection for water and a chocolate custard product. These were used as typical examples to show the diversity of products that can be processed with respect to time required to reach 90 C. These are reported to demonstrate both the data collection and the Steam Infusion Vaction™ Pump processing times achieved under trial conditions.
- (3)
- The volatile compounds in the product trials processed batches of a curry sauce that contained water (27% w/v), onion (7% w/v), tomato (15% w/v), rapeseed oil (5% w/v), tomato purée (10% w/v), ground spices (15% w/v), which comprised paprika, coriander, mustard, fenugreek leaf, and coriander leaf. The recipe used contained a modified maize starch (3% w/v), sugar (3% w/v), garlic purée (7% w/v), salt (3% w/v), and yeast extract powder (5% w/v).
2.3. Analysis of Food Volatiles for Steam Infusion Cooking
3. Results
3.1. The Energy and CO2e Balance for Steam Infusion Processes
3.2. The Operational Efficiencies of Steam Infusion
3.3. Analysis of Volatiles in Steam Infusion
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Steam Infusion Operational Efficiency | |
---|---|
Energy reduction at point of use compared to steam jacket vessel cooking (% reduction) | 17.3 |
Production time saved by Steam Infusion cooking method related CIP reduction (cleaning time hours reduced per year) | 277.8 |
GHG reduction due to decreased energy use (CO2e reduction per year) | 8.7 |
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Brooks, C.; Swainson, M.; Beauchamp, I.; Campelos, I.; Ishak, R.; Martindale, W. Transformational Steam Infusion Processing for Resilient and Sustainable Food Manufacturing Businesses. Foods 2021, 10, 1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10081763
Brooks C, Swainson M, Beauchamp I, Campelos I, Ishak R, Martindale W. Transformational Steam Infusion Processing for Resilient and Sustainable Food Manufacturing Businesses. Foods. 2021; 10(8):1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10081763
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrooks, Christopher, Mark Swainson, Ian Beauchamp, Isabel Campelos, Ruzaina Ishak, and Wayne Martindale. 2021. "Transformational Steam Infusion Processing for Resilient and Sustainable Food Manufacturing Businesses" Foods 10, no. 8: 1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10081763
APA StyleBrooks, C., Swainson, M., Beauchamp, I., Campelos, I., Ishak, R., & Martindale, W. (2021). Transformational Steam Infusion Processing for Resilient and Sustainable Food Manufacturing Businesses. Foods, 10(8), 1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10081763